I'm glad you found it helpful, thank you! Sometimes I wonder how my older videos are standing up to the test of time, so I am glad to know it is still useful!
You are an underrated Channel! Your Videos have such a great quality, your voice is nice to listen to and the visuals are clear and quickly understandable!
Great news! I am behind on releasing the newer version of this, but it is almost ready. You may be aware that VS 2019 updates introduce a new GitHub UI, so please keep your eyes open for that.
Thanks! Next up is using Virtual Studio with Azure DevOps. Then I’m asking if people want to know how to set up Azure DevOps for their org. Please let me know what you are looking for.
@@bill-raymond When you create a local database and push with git it is always missing APP_Data file with DB. I can fix it manually but is there a better solution? if you make video explanation that would be awesome.
@@essamkhattab2156 I figured out the solution and created a video for you! Please be aware, a best practice is to share your scripts to create the database, tables, queries, etc., but after you watch the video, you will know how to add the app_data and DB (mdf, ldf, ndf) files to your Git and GitHub repos. Hope you like it! th-cam.com/video/DSUtqG2wk2E/w-d-xo.html
@@bill-raymond Azure DevOps really is for business projects so I am interested only in GIT since I can use it for free (being a retired pensioner). Also, Azure DevOps seems to me to suit teams more than individuals. The downside is that to keep your code non-public it costs!
Hi Marcelo, I am looking into that so will likely post something on it in the future but it will probably not be right away. Thanks for the nice words!
For some reason, he is obsessed with perfecting his Bieber hair and Rollie Fingers stache, but I'm sure that will pass. He's style choices naturally keep people socially distant from him so he is totally safe. I'll pass your concern along. :-)
I would like to see doing all this in Visual Studio. The scenario will be a group of 20 developers working on a big solution with many projects . The concept would be having a master in GitHub and everybody willing to make a change has to create a Branch in GitHub. The standard is to create a branch named with a Task#. in GitHub. So everybody is aware that a branch exist for the Task# and when and who created it and what is about. At this point this is all you do in GitHub. Then you go to VS and create a folder with same Task#, then you create a branch and checkout the solution inside the folder in your pc (... repos/Task#/...) . Then you start making changes on VS , committing locally to the branch, then after you are done commit and sync to the remote branch, so QA can test your branch changes. Finally after QA approves , sync the branch with master branch and you are done. Unless you have a better method. Thanks
Hi Gregory, my videos have slowed down a bit because of the pandemic and having to deal with other pressing business issues, but I am working on a few right now. Collaboration requests are really common and I am going to do something along those lines, so please subscribe if you have not already and keep your eyes out. It probably won't be twenty people, but I am working out the process for two people using rebase and I think it is scalable.
Thanks Bill for such a great video, I have a question, let's say I created a pull request and commit two changes and the merge accepted by the author, but after that I want to add more changes like some other commits, every time I make a change I have to do a pull request again or just once is enough ?
That is how I had been doing it (1 PR = 1 batch of changes). However what you want is totally acceptable. You can simply commit your changes on that PR, make a commit, and do a push (or sync, whatever you like). When the PR owner goes to your changes, there will be a “Commits” tab in GitHub. They will also get notifications and see them in VSCode or VS 2019. So yeah, you can do it. Here’s what I will say though.. make a different pull request if your changes are not directly related to that PR. Make sense?
@@bill-raymond Before this video Bill, I already watched the link you give me and I really learned a lot. What's my focus now is how to "code review - pull requests" using Azure DevOps. Also thank you for your fast response on this. God Bless you ! ! !
I’m learning that too and still trying to make sense of it. You can do most of that locally but not every azure service is available for local debugging. People always say “just upload to your test environment” but how do you do that and do it properly seems to be lost. I’ll post something when I’ve come up with something that seems reasonable - for me at least :)
Bill, you save hours of mine for researching these, you rocks!
Awesome! So glad to hear hear stories like this!
This was a very well-made, well-explained video. Thank you!
I'm glad you found it helpful, thank you! Sometimes I wonder how my older videos are standing up to the test of time, so I am glad to know it is still useful!
Never subscribed to anyone so fast! Nice channel, keep it going!
Well thank you! That’s a great compliment!
You are an underrated Channel!
Your Videos have such a great quality, your voice is nice to listen to and the visuals are clear and quickly understandable!
Thank you very much and glad you are enjoying the videos!
I have never underrated it! I just discovered it, and it is GREAT!
Thank you so much for this informative video Bill. Thanks a ton!
You are very welcome!
Great video!! Thank you so much!! I don't have enough words to say thanks, but I really appreciate it.
Thank you very much! I am very happy this helped you!
Straight to the point. No bull. Thanks for uploading.❤👍
Thank you again for another great comment!
Fantastic explanation. You are so good at teaching.
Thank you very much! If you wouldn’t mind, I would appreciate your sharing the channel with others. Happy new year!
Hipster Bill deserves his own channel
I will let him know. He will be so stoked!
Great! Thank you so much. I appreciate it. this helped me a lot in my job.
Great news! I am behind on releasing the newer version of this, but it is almost ready. You may be aware that VS 2019 updates introduce a new GitHub UI, so please keep your eyes open for that.
Hi Bill
You are an excellent teacher - I must say.... thanks a lot :)
Thank you!
Really amazing video
Thank you!
Nice tutorial, you did a great job. Loved Hipster Bill Raymond =)
Thanks and I will let Hipster Bill Raymond know you liked it once he emerges from his yurt and is out of self isolation.
great and useful information!! really I enjoying , keep up Bill :)
Thanks! Next up is using Virtual Studio with Azure DevOps. Then I’m asking if people want to know how to set up Azure DevOps for their org. Please let me know what you are looking for.
@@bill-raymond When you create a local database and push with git it is always missing APP_Data file with DB. I can fix it manually but is there a better solution? if you make video explanation that would be awesome.
I’m unsure of that issue and will see if I can figure it out. If I do I’ll respond back with a new video.
@@essamkhattab2156 I figured out the solution and created a video for you! Please be aware, a best practice is to share your scripts to create the database, tables, queries, etc., but after you watch the video, you will know how to add the app_data and DB (mdf, ldf, ndf) files to your Git and GitHub repos. Hope you like it! th-cam.com/video/DSUtqG2wk2E/w-d-xo.html
@@bill-raymond Azure DevOps really is for business projects so I am interested only in GIT since I can use it for free (being a retired pensioner). Also, Azure DevOps seems to me to suit teams more than individuals. The downside is that to keep your code non-public it costs!
Great video, nice job Bill!
Thank you very much =)
You are very welcome! Glad you found the video helpful!
Awesome video, Bill, thank you very much. Could you do something explaining how I can add/merge PRs from the original project to my fork?
Hi Marcelo, I am looking into that so will likely post something on it in the future but it will probably not be right away. Thanks for the nice words!
@@bill-raymond Thank you for the reply Bill
Hipster Bill Raymond needs a haircut! He must be social distancing during this virus pandemic! LOL
For some reason, he is obsessed with perfecting his Bieber hair and Rollie Fingers stache, but I'm sure that will pass. He's style choices naturally keep people socially distant from him so he is totally safe. I'll pass your concern along. :-)
I would like to see doing all this in Visual Studio. The scenario will be a group of 20 developers working on a big solution with many projects . The concept would be having a master in GitHub and everybody willing to make a change has to create a Branch in GitHub. The standard is to create a branch named with a Task#. in GitHub. So everybody is aware that a branch exist for the Task# and when and who created it and what is about. At this point this is all you do in GitHub. Then you go to VS and create a folder with same Task#, then you create a branch and checkout the solution inside the folder in your pc (... repos/Task#/...) . Then you start making changes on VS , committing locally to the branch, then after you are done commit and sync to the remote branch, so QA can test your branch changes. Finally after QA approves , sync the branch with master branch and you are done. Unless you have a better method. Thanks
Hi Gregory, my videos have slowed down a bit because of the pandemic and having to deal with other pressing business issues, but I am working on a few right now. Collaboration requests are really common and I am going to do something along those lines, so please subscribe if you have not already and keep your eyes out. It probably won't be twenty people, but I am working out the process for two people using rebase and I think it is scalable.
Thanks Bill for such a great video, I have a question, let's say I created a pull request and commit two changes and the merge accepted by the author, but after that I want to add more changes like some other commits, every time I make a change I have to do a pull request again or just once is enough ?
That is how I had been doing it (1 PR = 1 batch of changes). However what you want is totally acceptable. You can simply commit your changes on that PR, make a commit, and do a push (or sync, whatever you like). When the PR owner goes to your changes, there will be a “Commits” tab in GitHub. They will also get notifications and see them in VSCode or VS 2019. So yeah, you can do it. Here’s what I will say though.. make a different pull request if your changes are not directly related to that PR. Make sense?
Thanks for the reply, I think I got the idea.
Thanks Hipster Bill, you are way cooler than Regular Bill :D:D
I will totally let Hipster Bill know! We are meeting later tonight for cans of Hamm’s beer after a quick ride on our fixies.
hi sir does "Bill" can open the program on visual studio and make changes from there in place of making the changes on github?
Yes. I just did not do it to get the video done a little faster.
@@bill-raymond okay sir i tried to do this but unfortunately my friend could not open the program on visual studio
Have your friend fork the code, open that forked copy in VS and then send a Pull Request
@@bill-raymond Thank you sir we will try to do this.
Hi bill, again you're amazing. I hope you can teach us in Azure DevOps and VS2019 - pull request. Because my Clients use that remote repository.
Actually, that is available on this channel under "The Occasional Developer" Playlist. Here is the link: th-cam.com/video/sntGDmwA7yw/w-d-xo.html
@@bill-raymond Before this video Bill, I already watched the link you give me and I really learned a lot. What's my focus now is how to "code review - pull requests" using Azure DevOps. Also thank you for your fast response on this. God Bless you ! ! !
I’m learning that too and still trying to make sense of it. You can do most of that locally but not every azure service is available for local debugging. People always say “just upload to your test environment” but how do you do that and do it properly seems to be lost. I’ll post something when I’ve come up with something that seems reasonable - for me at least :)